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The Polysyllabic Spree by Nick Hornby
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The Polysyllabic Spree

by Nick Hornby

Series: Believer Columns (1)

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1,314352,812 (3.7)70
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McSweeney's (2004), Paperback

Member:cabri
Collections:Your library, To readRating:
Tags:book reviews, essays, nonfiction
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English (34)  Italian (1)  All languages (35)
Showing 1-5 of 34 (next | show all)
A decent read, althought a bit self indulgent on the authors part. I laughed outloud a few times at his observations. He is good. I will give him that. ( )
  onelilbookworm | Nov 20, 2009 |
OK so I didn't read this, really; instead, Sky read many long parts aloud to me. I feel like I read it. I feel like I loved it. ( )
  jentifer | Aug 15, 2009 |
Dud.

I like Nick Hornby; he's one of the very few British novelists whose work I keep up with. The concept seems ok and Hornby is a generous man, but the book just didn't work. Even more startling, you assume: must have worked better on the Web. Yet I don't think this entire series appeared online--maybe just some of the entries. I think one would have had to read them in the print editions of The Believer.

I thought he'd write at least a paragraph on each book--an off-the-cuff reaction. There's rarely even that!

Although I appreciate his honesty, I was shocked by the canonical works he hadn't and hasn't read. He has never read Robert Lowell, has no sense of Lowell's status, doesn't feel compelled to read his work after reading Hamilton's bio.

This great vista opened out of all the other post-World War II poets he hadn't read: Anne Sexton, Isabel Bishop, Adrienne Rich, Randall Jarrell, John Berryman and on and on. Hell, he probably hasn't read the Beats or New York Poets or Black Mountain Poets or John Ashbery. William Carlos Williams? Ezra Pound? Brodsky? Neruda? I don't want to think about it. Well, he apparently doesn't read poetry and never has. Awesome, and not in a good way.

But it gets worse: Until this series, he'd never read Nine Stories, Franny and Zooey. (He had read Catcher in the Rye, I think.) Hornby's writing style in his fiction owes a lot to Salinger so you're waiting for some little apercu about one of these stories or one of these books. Nada!

Also shocking how little in the way of translated literature he read. There were only two or three and they were classics, like Candide and Chekov's short stories, that he should have read decades ago. I read Chekov's short stories in high school, a mediocre high school, and again in college.

I know that a big difference between American, Filipino and British readers is that the former two tend to read a lot more Latin American lit. And Americans often read it in Spanish. But he's a fiction writer ... he seems to be cut off from one of the most vital currents in literature today. And it's not like he's up on Indians writing in English either.

I'm glad that I borrowed it from the library's paperback shelf. I'd be annoyed if I had lugged home a hardback. ( )
1 vote Periodista | Apr 16, 2009 |
Required reading for LibraryThing members. I know Nick is somewhere here on the site when Arsenal is not playing at the Emirates.
  cmeatto | Jan 1, 2009 |
A collection of Hornby's Believer columns. Hysterical, witty and fun. ( )
  katet | Dec 3, 2008 |
Showing 1-5 of 34 (next | show all)
Taken in their intended periodic doses, these essays would be simultaneously entertaining and enriching – no small feat, that. Collected, they're still breezy and thought-provoking, but read at once they show Hornby struggling with great seriousness between an Arsenal match, The Fortress of Solitude, and going down to the pub: a dilemma welcomed by, say, Kentucky coal miners or single mothers working retail.
 
Hornby is just humble enough that you cannot hate or resent him, yet authoritative enough that you still retain some reason to respect and be interested in his opinion on books. That in itself is not a feat many writers could pull off so elegantly, if at all.
added by stephmo | editPopMatters, Nicholas Taylor (Feb 1, 2005)
 
This is not a collection of book reviews, but a reading diary of sharp and thoughtful musings on literature that ultimately asks: Why do we read, anyway?
added by stephmo | editBoston Globe, Carol Iaciofano (Jan 19, 2005)
 
Edible poems. The liabilities of blurbs. Books that haunt us and taunt us and keep us up half the night. "The Polysyllabic Spree" is a journey as rich and varied as the world of literature itself, with Hornby perfectly cast as both tour guide and host.
 
What's most valuable about this collection, though, is that Hornby, by dint of his sensibility and the variety of his choices, shows that the distinction still made between reading for the sake of "enrichment" (as that gasbag Harold Bloom insists upon) and reading for pleasure is a phony divide.
added by stephmo | editSalon.com, Charles Taylor (Dec 9, 2004)
 
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To Dave and Vendela
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So this is supposed to be about the how, and when, and hy, and what of reading -- about the way that, when reading is going well, one book leads to another and to another, a paper trail of theme and meaning and how, hen it's going badly, when books don't stick or take, when your mood and the mood of the book are fighting like cats, you'd rather do anything but attempt the next paragraph, or reread the last one for the tenth time.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Do not combine this work with ‘The Complete Polysyllabic Spree’, which is a British edition that also contains ‘Housekeeping vs The Dirt’.
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The Polysyllabic Spree

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